Lesson 13 The Subjunctive Mood
Lesson 13 The Subjunctive Mood
Aims
Context
today.
Examples
a) If I were you, I would not go in there!
Here were is neither a Past Tense nor a Plural, as can be seen from the if I
before it, and the Conditional verb in the Subordinate Clause (n.b. for more
about Subordinate Clauses, see the previous Lesson)
This is our form of the Subjunctive, used to express doubt and uncertainty;
i.e. there is no clear statement being made, but it is basically a conditional
or hypothetical statement! (what might happen if...)
b) Let there be light
This Subjunctive has two parts, let + be; (be is the actual Subjunctive form,
let forming the other half of what is in fact an Indirect Command) (See
Lesson Fourteen on Different Types of Verbs with special reference to
Commands...)
c) Long live the Queen:
live is again in the Subjunctive and is another Indirect Command: it is short
for: Let the Queen live long
n.b.
Let as in Let there be light can be replaced by may; (we
saw may previously as a modal verb in the previous Lesson); you can also
say equally Long may the Queen live...
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But on the whole apart from the above examples e.g. long live
the king, may and let + the verb, you can say there is
effectively no Present Subjunctive as a separate form in
English. We have on the whole removed it as an unnecessary
part of our language - unlike many other languages which still
keep it.
May
Before we come to the First Activity, it would best to look at the Auxiliary or
Modal Verb may; it has a number of meanings and uses:
a) To express doubt and is part of the Present Subjunctive.
Examples
It may rain today
They may not be the best team in the world
b) To express an order and is also part of the Present Subjunctive, but with
a different meaning.
Examples
May you go!
Long may he stay with us!
Please note: God save the Queen = May God save the Queen!
Long live the Queen = May the Queen live long!
All these are forms of the Subjunctive, which while continuing always to
express doubt or uncertainty, shows this in a number of ways, the
command being one of them, which though not apparently doubtful, has in
fact a certain amount of doubt. You can order someone to do something, but
that does not guarantee the action will actually be done; an order is a
desired action, not an action!... (See Lesson Fourteen for Commands)
These examples are quite old fashioned, and little used these days: even so
it is useful to have a look at them in order to be aware of the various
meanings of may. The final main use of may is the following: (looked at
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earlier)
c) To express permission and is an alternative to can...
Examples
You may go!
They may come if they wish
Now we come to the first Activity which practises the use and recognition of
the Subjunctive in English; as usual you have the Key after this Lesson.
Activity
1
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